HADS is probably one of FPAN's most popular and successful training programs, occurring at least once a year near Marathon (Duck Key) in the Florida Keys (HADS programs are often scheduled in other areas of FL as need arises). Its success is due in part to the collaboration with underwater archaeologists at the state DHR, who join FPAN staff to teach about preservation and submerged archaeological resource laws in Florida.

As part of their curriculum, dive instructors are obligated to teach about protecting the ocean's natural resources (e.g, coral reefs, fish, mollusks), but cultural resources--namely shipwrecks--are often ignored entirely. HADS directly addresses this issue, explaining that shipwrecks and other human-made objects have also become part of the natural undersea ecosystem. Further, these resources are equally fragile, and cannot be enjoyed buy future divers if they're routinely touched, looted, and/or molested by underwater adventurers. To solidify this point, HADS students dive on two separate shipwrecks. One has been heavily looted, and there isn't as much to see and enjoy. The second is more pristine, offering a more complete record of the resource--and thus a more satisfying experience.Read in much more detail about HADS and FPAN Northeast's past experience here.

You can barely make out the wooden planks of "Brick Wreck"
because it has been heavily looted.

Although the HADS program has been offered at several different locations throughout Florida, it has been relegated to open-water marine environments. As we all know, these only tell part of Florida's rich maritime history. The state's estuaries, rivers, and springs also offer an immense record of both historic and prehistoric (canoes!) submerged resources.

To address this concern, FPAN staff from multiple regions will be collaborating to create a "Spring/River" HADS that focuses on our state's vast inland waterways. This new program is expected to be up and running by fall of 2014, so stay tuned to our blog and FPAN's home webpage for details on this forthcoming training program.

The Florida Public Archeaeology Network started a blog as an outreach tool back in 2007. We hoped to reach a wider digital audience and share some of our experiences in the field, at festivals and with current happenings in archaeology. Since then, we've logged around 330 posts with well over 100,000 page views.

Artifact found at the GTM NERR from a "What is it Wenesday?" post.

Through our blog, readers have gone on numerous site tours and visits throughout Northeast Florida
(and beyond!) including historic cemeteries, prehistoric middens, shipwrecks and historic homes. Our readers have played games with us like "What is it Wednesday?" They've gotten book reviews, museum exhibit previews and special interviews with local celebrities (aka, archaeologists).

Our most popular post's topic: Tattoos!

The good things that have come from it are numerous. We've helped highlight endangered sites as well as told about little (and big!) preservation victories. We've shared knowledge about archaeology and the past for peers and the public. In fact, our post on Native tattooing in the Southeast is our biggest hit of all.

The bad things have luckily been few and far between. We've had to pull down a post because of weird legal reasons (the post implied someone's job included more research than it really does. He's supposed to mostly just manage resources and only do research when it's a part of that, which does happen a lot.). We've had some typos. (Okay, maybe more than a few...)

One of the ugliest sites we've featured as a warning: a vandalized cemetery in Edgewater

The ugliest thing about our blog has been out own learning curb. How do we keep things engaging? How often should we post? And how do we make Blogger put the pictures where we want them?! (The secret as I've come to realize it is only composing in the Blogger window itself - no copying and pasting!) I think everyone who's blogged for us has learned a little something about technology and outreach in the process. Somehow the ugly keeps becoming a part of the good in the end... and so we blog on!

Words by Emily Jane Murray, FPAN Staff

This blog post is in support of a small movement in archaeological blogging. At the 2014 Society for American Archaeology conference, a few folks
have put together an entire session on Blogging on Archaeology. In honor
of this session, archaeologists in the blog-o-sphere have been typing
away on, well, blogging about archaeology. To learn more about this project, visit Doug's Archaeology Blog.

Hi! My name is Gabrielle. Are you interested in Textiles?
Here in St. Augustine we have a Textile Guild which is made up of members that
share a common love of all things textile!We enjoy spinning, weaving, dying…and everything in between.Being based in St. Augustine, FL our nation’s
oldest city, our members also are interested in the historical aspect of our
craft. We delve into this history through demonstrating to the public different
techniques of textiles that would have been done during the 1500’s – 1800’s. We
would love to have you join our group to learn and share your craft!Please visit us in the historical Lightener
Museum Building , First Floor… on the second Thursday of every month.

The Saint Augustine
Garrison is a group of re-enactors who portray the life and times of the
Spanish soldiers and their families in 1740s Colonial Spanish Saint Augustine.
The Saint Augustine Garrison was created in July, 1984 by the Historic Florida
Militia, Inc. a 501 (c) 3, Non-Profit Cooperation. Their mission is to foster
an understanding of military history of early Spanish Florida through military
demonstration, interpretive programs, portrayals and publications and to
provide visitors of the Castillo de San Marcos and Fort Matanzas a trip back
into time of 1740 Spanish Saint Augustine.

Next time you are in Northeast Florida, please be sure to
visit one of my favorite places- Mandarin Museum and Historical Society.It is located in Walter Jones Historical
Park.You can step back in time as you
walk along the path under the ancient oak trees.Or sit on the porch of the old farmhouse and
get your picture taken.If you are
really lucky, the manatees will be feeding just off the shore.I love to spend time here and think about the
days long ago when Harriet Beecher Stowe sat on her front porch just down the
road waving at the river boats going by.This place is a hidden treasure!!

Confessions of a
Serial Blogger

Blogging is great but there is a learning curve.Over many years – and some abandoned blogs –
I feel that I’m getting a little closer to it, mostly by learning that less is
more.My first blogs looked like
something useful for defending a dissertation – ponderous, lengthy, full of notes,
research, citations, careful prose - and then I discovered the joys of simple
conversational writing and photos.

I realized that the whole point was to tell people about
something I was interested in, answer a question somebody had asked me about
some of the things that I do – which range from traveling to Spain, to
constructing Nativity scenes, to working on historic cemetery preservation –
and let people know how interesting and fun this was.And once I stopped looking over my shoulder
and just chatting, which is really what a blog is, a chat with photos, my
blogging took off.

My current most active blog is not a personal blog, but
belongs to the aforementioned historic cemetery: Tolomato Cemetery.

What photo might work for this blog? Well, there’s always
the classic headstone…

However, most of the photos I use are actually photos taken
at the cemetery, either by me or by one of the other members of our group, the
Tolomato Cemetery Preservation Association.

Above is a visiting
day at the cemetery.There’s always
something to talk about, and the blog is really just an extension of this.

At St. Johns County – Cultural Resources, I’m researching West
Augustine as a significant and historical community.This class is a great way to introduce myself!I started my Master of Historic Preservation
at the University of Florida.My
introduction to UF and Historic Preservation was in Preservation Institute:Nantucket (PIN).Starting in summer
2012, I went on a 15-month adventure which started with a field school in
Indonesia.UF partnered with InstitutTeknologi – Bandung to analyze the potential for listing the ex-mining city,
Sawahlunto, as a World Heritage Site.After the program, I traveled around SE Asia with 3 other girls.It inspired me to serve as an AmeriCorpsVISTA for one year in Honolulu, Hawaii.I worked at Hawaiian Community Assets, a HUD-approved non-profit
organization founded and run by Native Hawaiians to help the community reach
financial literacy to obtain permanent housing.While I was in grad school, my mom walked the Camino de Santiago across
Spain, fell in love, and stayed in Spain.After my VISTA year, I visited my mom after walking the Camino
myself.Immediately following the
Camino, I began working for St. Johns County – happy to be here!

Mandarin is today
known as a suburb of Jacksonville but it was once a significant community whose
economy was driven by the citrus, lumber and turpentine industries. Harriet
Beecher Stowe wintered in Mandarin for 17
years and played a significant role in Reconstruction in this area.We preserve and tell the stories of
Mandarin’s past events and people through exhibits, educational programs and
activities.

Coming up in April,
2014 is a very significant event in Mandarin’s history - the 150th
anniversary of the sinking of the Union steamship Maple Leaf by the
Confederates in the St. Johns River at Mandarin Point. Join us on April 6 for a Sesquicentennial
celebration of the Maple Leaf, her men and the archaeological team who brought
her story to life for us. Artifacts from the Maple Leaf will be on exhibit
throughout the rest of 2014 and Dr. Keith Holland, organizer of the underwater
survey and recovery of artifacts will be an integral part of the activities. For more information check out our website: http://www.mandarinmuseum.net/

Volunteer at Tolomato!

Hello my name is Patty Kelbert. I am a volunteer at the Tolomato cemetery my job is
preservation and restoration. I am learning to restore metal work which is a 3 part
tedious task.First you clean the metal
of all rust dirt and pealing of old paint and debris we do this by brushing and
scrubbing with wire brushes. Then when the surface is clean we spray and cover
with a rust barrier that will block the rust. Then we cover with a primer by
painting on.Then we the last step is to
protect with paint.

One
of the most undiscovered museums in St. Augustine, Florida is the O’ReillyHouse Museum. It is located on one of the oldest cobblestone streets, Aviles
Street in St. Augustine.It has lovely antique pieces, musical
instruments and wonderful old school books. Some of the school supplies were
printed on the German Weiler Press. That
is also located in the house.The house
is built of coquina and tabby. It was the rectory for Fr. O’Reilly, who was the
pastor when the Cathedral Basilica was built in 1793 – 1797. Then it was used
as a convent and school house. It is a wonderful place to step into the past.

Today I visited the Ximenez-Fatio HistoricalHouse on Aviles St. in St. Augustine, FL, to
view their new introductory video. It’s located in the Gift Shop area of the
site.WOW!! They have really provided great visuals
with the story of people who might have visited St. Augustine in the nineteenth
century and chose to stay at the Ximenez-Fatio Boarding House.Most people traveled to St. Augustine via
the St. Johns River and stopped at Picolata.From there they traveled by stagecoach over muddy/rough roads for up to
eight hours to reach the “ancient” city.Sometimes, the military would have to escort the “tourists” to town.

You can gain better
insight into “tourists” or “sojourners” who might have chosen St. Augustine as
their destination by taking the thirty-minute tour that takes you into a
variety of rooms that have been designed to represent the typical boarder.For example, we know that naturalists like
John and William Bartram stayed in St. Augustine during their travels.One of the rooms is set up to reflect what a
naturalist would have in their room.

By the way, staying in a boarding house instead of going to
a hotel was selecting the “gold standard” of visiting.No private bathrooms, however!Today’s visitors would demand much more, but
the beauty and history of St. Augustine still brings lots of people!!

On Memorial weekend
2012, my wife and I attended a clean up day for these cemeteries.After being introduced to Juan and Kristie,
the hosts for the clean up, my wife and I told them thank you for showing us
around the cemetery and we returned to Jacksonville aster having promised to
return the following day ready to work.

Once in
Jacksonville, I told my wife we had some shopping to do as I no longer had any
of my outdoor power equipment.We went
to ACE hardware and purchased new Stihl professional grade landscape tools and
began preparing for the next day.

On Sunday, we
arrived at the cemeteries around 0700.We set up our outdoor canopy and worktable, fired up the new line
trimmer and set to work.As I operated
the trimmer cutting through grasses about 12 inches tall, my wife and two
children began raking and bagging the grasses and small branches laying around.We set a goal of 20 feet and made it with the
results shown below.

Old things in the now

Looking at old things is what I
do.In the woods, in a field, in the
marsh….I search them out across the county.This search ends up in some happy places, beautiful places, dark places,
and maybe some haunted places (It can feel that way sometimes).All these things, left behind by people who
lived lives where we live them today. These
things remain and they are part of our world right here and now.Stepping into their world is like opening up
a direct link to humanity past and future.My own Tardis.

text and images: noted in articles where permitted and most images credited to organizations with links in the text.

Castillo de San
Marcos Timeline Event

The Castillo de San Marcos hosted the annual Timeline event
on November 23, 2013. This year, our event featured soldiers through history,
an interpretive program that took visitors through the different eras of the
Castillo’s history, including the 1st Spanish period, the Civil War, and WWII.
History about Oglethorpe’s 1740 siege and the Patriot War was also presented to
visitors as they navigated through the Castillo.

Park
Ranger Joe Brehm briefed the volunteers before the beginning of the timeline
event. Without volunteers, the Castillo de San Marcos NM would be unable to
provide such an immersive experience, Thank You!

In 1740, British troops under Governor Oglethorpe laid siege
on the Castillo de San Marcos. During the siege, the entire city of St.
Augustine was packed inside the walls of the Castillo. Volunteers at the
timeline event explained the impacts of the siege to the visitors.

Stay tuned for more information about the Castillo and the
Timeline Event!